Occupy Wall Street is a struggle that can unite us at a time when unity has been a rare commodity. … [It is a] chorus giving voice to our common struggles, our shared disillusionment, our uncertainties and concerns for the future. People are standing up for themselves and for each other, and that includes those of us in the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender community.

LGBT people know what it’s like to struggle. We know the damage done by systemic inequity and discrimination that make our families acutely vulnerable to economic hardship. For example:

LGBT people are more vulnerable to employment discrimination because there is no federal law banning discrimination based on sexual orientation or gender identity. We’re still fired, denied promotions and harassed, just for being who we are.

Our recent national survey on transgender discrimination found that many transgender people live in extreme poverty. Respondents reported experiencing unemployment at twice the rate of the general population, with rates for people of color up to four times the national rate.

The so-called Defense of Marriage Act blocks married same-sex couples from receiving more than 1,100 federal protections and responsibilities afforded to married opposite-sex couples. These protections are critical to the economic security of families, and include Social Security survivor benefits, joint tax filings, and family and medical leave.

For us, the system is not only broken; it is purposely constructed to leave us out. And we know that is true for others in the United States, as well. Like Occupy Wall Street, we believe that fairness is not a privilege of power and wealth but a right of humanity.